Lake Michigan Biodiversity: Central Basin East
Green Bay


Approximate demarcation
of Central Basin East and
Central Basin West.
NapefvUle '
Joliet
The Lake Michigan Lakewide Action and Management Plan (LAMP)
is a collaborative, adaptive management program where federal, state, tribal
and local governments along with other partners work together to protect and
restore Lake Michigan. The LAMP shares responsibility for implementing
many aspects of the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement (GLWQA), which
seeks to "restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and biological integrity
of the Waters of the Great Lakes." One commitment under the GLWQA is to
develop and implement lakewide habitat and species protection and
restoration strategies.
The Central Basin East is the area between the Northern Basin and the Mid-
Lake Plateau that spans the Michigan shoreline. It includes the Two Rivers
Ridge, Door-Leelanau Ridge and Chippewa Basin. This area borders portions
of Mason, Manistee. Benzie, and Leelanau Counties in Michigan. Unique
^drowned river mouths" are significant coastal wetland features that provide
habitat protected from waves and storms.
Dune formations along the coast dominate the landscape and offer unique
biodiversity habitats. Central Basin East is also home to Sleeping Bear Dunes
National Lakeshore, an important natural resource consisting of miles of
beach, dimes, bluffs, inland lakes, northern hardwood forests, and unique flora
and fauna.
Nearshore waters provide traditional spawning habitat for whitefish and other
fish species. Offshore waters of Central Basin East support populations of
native fish and invertebrates that support important fisheries. Located at the
northern end of Central Basin East is half of one of Lake Michigan's two Lake
Trout Refuges (the other half of located in the Northern Basin). The refuges
are underwater, ancient habitat areas that are currently used to stock native
Lake
Trout and encourage natural spawning in an effort to create a self-sustaining population in Lake Michigan.
Collaboration among partners in the Central Basin East region is needed to implement key actions that will maintain and increase the
viability of biodiversity and abate identified threats to biodiversity.
Threats to Biodiversity
In an assessment of threats to biodiversity, numerous experts rated the current viability status of an array of targets using recognized
Key Ecological Attributes and indicators of viability (Table 1). Critical threats to biodiversity in the entire Central Basin region
include aquatic and terrestrial invasive species; climate change; and housing and urban development. Invasive species can alter
ecosystem attributes, such as water clarity and nutrient levels, and present serious threats to native species. Invasive sea lamprey prey
on native fish, resulting in high fish mortality in northern Lake Michigan. Climate changes may contribute to low water levels and the
potential for invasive species to dominate emergent shorelines. Coastal development and shoreline alterations have negatively
impacted coastal wetland and terrestrial systems, resulting in altered migration patterns for birds and fish.
Table 1. Viability Assessment Summary for Central Basin
TARGET CATEGORY
ASSESSMENT
THREAT STATUS
Nearshore Zone
Fair
High
Aerial Migrants
Fair
High
Coastal Terrestrial Systems
Fair
High
Coastal Wetlands
Good
Very High
Islands
Good
Medium
Native Migratory Fish
Fair
High
Offshore Zone
Fair
Medium
Source: Lake Michigan Biodiversity Conservation Strategy, 2013.
Lake Michigan from Empire Bluff, Sleeping
National Lakeshore, Ml.
Photo: National Park Service
Bear Dunes
Lake Michigan Central Basin East Biodiversity
Revised September 2014

-------
Strategies Needed to Conserve Biodiversity
A number of actions can be taken by agencies, tribes, municipalities, planning commissions, and other partners concerned with
biodiversity in the Central Basin East area. The following strategies are recommended. For additional details, see Chapter 6 of the
Lake Michigan Biodiversity Conservation Strategy.
Strategies for Very High Threat Targets:
•	Align projects among Lake Michigan states to implement common policies, risk assessments, and funding that will minimize
invasive species.
•	Support efforts to inventory and control aquatic and terrestrial invasive species.
•	Use coordinated land use planning to align future development in coastal areas with biodiversity conservation and ecological
processes.
Strategies for High Threat Targets:
•	Improve land use practices to minimize water run-off contributing to nutrient saturation resulting in hypoxic conditions and
oxygen depletion in the nearshore.
•	Increase habitat connectivity by removing dams (after assessing the risk of sea lamprey access to new spawning grounds) and
restoring rivers to their natural state.
•	Broaden constituency for sea lamprey control, and continue lamprey management.
The Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (www.glri.us/) has supported habitat and species protection and restoration efforts and will
continue to serve as an important mechanism for implementing biodiversity conservation strategies in Central Basin East.
Key Next Steps
•	Identify opportunities to expand piping plover habitat and protection.
•	Continue efforts to control sea lamprey by conducting surveys of larval
and adult lampreys.
•	Control invasive vegetation in emergent shorelines.
•	Continue and expand streamside rearing of Lake Sturgeon.
•	Continue to identify and implement strategies to control nutrient runoff.
•	Implement adaptation actions to address climate changes, including
research on how reduced ice cover has impacted spawning cycles and
conditions favorable for spawning habitat.
•	Continue and expand efforts to train and certify green practices for marinas
and ports (www.miseagrant.umich.edu/greenmarina).
•	Work collaboratively to preserve and restore wetlands from the invasive
common reed Phragmites (www, greatlakesphra gmites.net provides an
interactive forum for stakeholders working on control of this wetland
problem).
•	Protect and enhance nearshore spawning habitat, wetlands, and shoreline.
Support the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service mass marking initiative and Lake Trout.
Support current and future efforts on Cisco (Lake Herring) restoration.
Promote widespread adoption of The Urban Conservation Treaty for Migratory Birds and continual implementation of the
North American Waterfowl Management Plan, in light of the added stress of climate change on species and habitats.
Determine roles and responsibilities in the Central Basin East area for education, surveillance and standardization of
procedures to aid in meeting the GLWQA Annex 6 Aquatic Invasive Species Goal of development and implementation of an
early detection and rapid response initiative by 2015.
Platte River flowing into Lake Michigan from Platte Point,
Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, Ml.
Photo: National Park Service
For More Information
www.epa.gov/greatlakes/lake-michigan
LAMP Partners
Chippewa Ottawa Resource Authority (CORA) //
Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians
Little Traverse Bay Band of Odawa Indians
Michigan Dept. of Environmental Quality
The Nature Conservancy /
www.1836cora.org
www.gtbindians.org
K www.ltbbodawa-nsn.gov
Mwww.michiaan.gov/deg
www.nature.org
U.S. EPA, Great Lakes National Program Office
Elizabeth Hinchey Malloy
Lake Michigan Manager
Phone: (312) 886-3451
hinchey.elizabeth@epa.gov
Lake Michigan Central Basin East Biodiversity
Revised September 2014

-------